We have several social wasps in Montana. Except for the Western yellowjacket, social wasps are typically not aggressive unless their nest is disturbed. Most are beneficial and feed on a lot of our garden pests.

Western yellowjacket

Fig. 1. Western yellowjacket. Photo by W. Cranshaw, Bugwood.org

Our most common wasps are bald-faced hornets, aerial yellowjackets, Western yellowjackets, and paper wasps (Fig 1-4).

They live in colonies, which include workers, queens, and drones. They all feed on insects. The Western yellowjacket is a scavenger, feeding on garbage, sugary materials, and dead insects. It is the biggest nuisance pest around our backyards and porches in late summer. Although other wasps and bees can sting, most of our stings come from the Western yellowjacket.

Bald-faced hornet

Fig. 3. bald-faced hornet. Photo by W. Cranshaw, Bugwood.org

Social wasps make paper-like nests annually in the spring from wood materials.

Aerial yellowjacket.

Fig. 2. Aerial yellowjacket. Photo by W. Cranshaw, Bugwwod.org

Wasp nests are abandoned in late summer, and only the fertilized females will overwinter; all the workers and drones die.

Locating wasp nests in the spring can be challenging. Western yellowjacket nests are

Paper wasp

Fig.4. Paper wasp. Photo by W.  Cranshaw, Bugwood.org

European paper wasp nest

Fig. 5. European paper wasp nest. Phot by L. Kerzicnik

often subterranean or sometimes in wall voids. Wasps can fly up to 1000 yards, so sometimes the nest can be quite a distance away.

Management Traps are available for Western yellowjackets (available

Bald-faced hornet nest

Fig. 7. Bald-faced hornet nest. Photo by L. Kerzicnik

at hardware and garden stores) (Fig. 6). They don’t trap other common

Western yellowjacket trap

Fig. 6. Western yellowjacket trap. Photo by W. Cranshaw

Montana wasps or bees. These traps are most effective when placed out in the spring when the queens emerge and before the Western yellowjacket colonies become large. Remove and limit exposure to all food sources, including garbage cans, pet foods, droppings from the grill, and any food or sugary-type sources in the backyard.

Controlling some of the larger nests can be difficult later in the summer. There can be hundreds to thousands of wasps in the colony, and the nest can be the size of a basketball or larger (Fig. 7). After a couple of serious frosts and cold weather, the wasps will be dead and you can knock down the paper nests.

Chemical control:

Active nests can be controlled chemically with a series of wasp sprays. Such active ingredients include permethrin, deltamethrin, tralomethrin, bifenthrin, tetramethrin, and allethrin. If using any of these products, apply them late in the evening, early morning, or on cool, rainy days when the nest is not very active. If controlling a Western yellowjacket nest, this might require several applications. Never plug what you think might be a Western yellowjacket hole on the outside of the house; this might force them to move further into the house and not have a way to exit.

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By Laurie Kerzicnik ([email protected])

 

Disclaimer: These recommendations are provided only as a guide. It is always the pesticide applicator’s     responsibility, by law, to read and follow all current label directions for the specific pesticide being     used. The authors and Montana State University assume no liability resulting from the use of these          recommendations. The Montana State University Extension Service is an ADA/EO/AA/Veteran’s Preference        Employer and Provider of Educational Outreach.

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